Introduction
Chapter One: Theological Responses in England to the South African War, 1899-1902
Chapter Two: Theology, Nationalism and the First World War: Christian Ethics and the Constraints of Politics
Chapter Three: Missionaries, Modernism, and German Theology: Anglican Reactions to the Outbreak of War in 1914
Chapter Four: The Church of England, Serbia and the Serbian Orthodox Church in the First World War
Chapter Five: Anglo-German Theological Relations in the First World War
Chapter Six: The Sanday, Sherrington and Troeltsch Affair: Theological relations between England and Germany after the First World War
Chapter Seven: The ‘sad story’ of Ernst Troeltsch’s Proposed British Lectures of 1923
Mark D. Chapman is Professor of the History of Modern Theology at the University of Oxford and Vice-Principal of Ripon College, Cuddesdon. He has written widely on the history of theology and the church. His most recent publications include Anglican Theology (2012), The Fantasy of Reunion: Anglicanism, Catholicism, and Ecumenism, 1833–1882 (2014), and Theology and Society in Three Cities: Berlin, Oxford and Chicago, 1800–1914 (2014).
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